82% of the interviewees will look stiff and scratch their heads during the interview? Micro expression? . This is the result of a survey published by Peking University College Students' Psychological Advisory Committee on October 26th, 65438/KLOC-0. Some experts pointed out that? Micro expression? It has become one of the key factors of college students' interview performance.
It is reported that the survey was designed and analyzed by Professor Zheng Richang of Beijing Normal University and designed by R e se arch I n te rn atio n; Al South China International Market Research Co., Ltd. completed the sampling among graduates of 10 city and interviewers of large enterprises, covering the psychology and stress management of students under pressure, which was rarely paid attention to by the education sector in the past.
According to the survey, 95% of interviewers value the psychological quality and stress resistance of candidates. Interviewers often have passed the preliminary screening and meet the basic requirements of employment. In the interview stage, most examiners pay more attention to the interviewer's good psychological quality, including whether the answers are natural and fluent, and whether the logic is rigorous. ?
This is recognized by Mr. Ouyang Hui, director of ChinaHR.com Talent Research Center, who is responsible for providing talent assessment services for many multinational enterprises. 70% information is transmitted through nonverbal symbols. A relaxed attitude and expression often give examiners a feeling of self-confidence, rich experience and strong social skills. ?
However, contrary to the examiner's wishes, 82% of the graduates who attend the interview will have all kinds of small gestures, such as grinning, flashing eyes and scratching their heads? Unnatural? what's up Micro expression? But only 60% of college students can be sure that they are in a state of tension. Some experts pointed out that these are out of conscious control? Micro expression? It tells the interviewer's inner pressure.
According to the survey, more than 60% of college students regard chewing gum as a way of daily relaxation. Experts suggest that chewing gum is also a good way to relieve stress for many students facing interview pressure.
According to statistics, with the unemployed college graduates last year, more than 7 million college graduates will participate in job hunting this year. Due to the financial crisis, the number of jobs is shrinking. College students in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and other places often have to submit more than 50 resumes to get less than 4 interview opportunities.
The survey found that 93% of college students' interview pressure comes from worrying about the examiner's evaluation of themselves, not their own strength. 86% of college students want to know how to relieve the interview pressure.
At Peking University? Wrigley, chew? At the scene, college students from various universities participated in various games such as shooting machine and dancing machine. Students understand the importance of relaxation in preparing for interviews and other high-pressure task environments. What's so special? Micro expression? Ferris wheel, will it be interviewed for the first time? Micro expression? Zoom in and let students see the interview pressure? Yourself? .
What interests students most is Wrigley chewing, right? Micro-expression star challenge? . This is a mock interview specially designed by famous human resources experts, and the topic is taken from the interview question bank of the world's top 500 enterprises. Twenty students who challenge for victory will be invited to Guangzhou? Arrow special training camp? .
Ethan, an interviewer at the challenge site and a human resources expert with many years of experience in campus recruitment, said: In campus life, the communication between school counselors and students can only play a limited role. The way of this competition can reproduce the tense environment of the interview site for students, and experts provide effective interview skills and decompression guidance for students in the competition. ? (Duan Lijun, reporter Ma Beibei)
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